Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11 provides in pertinent part
that pleadings and other papers shall be signed by at least one
attorney of record in the attorney's individual name, which
signature shall certify that he or she has read the paper and
believes it to be well grounded in fact and law; and that,
"[i]f a . . . paper is signed in violation of this rule, the
court . . . shall impose upon the person who signed it, a
represented party, or both, an appropriate sanction."
In the present case, the District Court imposed a Rule 11
monetary sanction against the law firm of the signing attorney,
rejecting the firm's contention that it could be imposed only
against the individual signer. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held: When read in the context of all of Rule 11's
signature provisions, the phrase "person who signed" connotes the
individual signer mentioned at the outset of the Rule, and
authorizes a court to impose a sanction only against that
individual. That is so even when the individual explicitly signs on
behalf of the firm, since it is only the signature "in the
attorney's individual name" which complies with the Rule's
requirement and to which the latter portions of the Rule attach
consequences. Pp.
493 U. S.
123-127.
854 F.2d 1452 (CA 21988), reversed in part and remanded.
SCALIA, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
REHNQUIST, C.J., and BRENNAN, WHITE, BLACKMUN, STEVENS, O'CONNOR,
and KENNEDY, JJ., joined. MARSHALL, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
493 U. S.
127.
Page 493 U. S. 121
Justice SCALIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11 provides in part:
"If a pleading, motion, or other paper is signed in violation of
this rule, the court . . . shall impose upon the person who signed
it . . . an appropriate sanction. . . ."
In this case, we must determine whether Rule 11 authorizes a
court to impose a sanction not only against the individual attorney
who signed, but also against that attorney's law firm.
I
The action giving rise to the current controversy was instituted
by plaintiff Northern J. Calloway against respondents for willful
copyright infringement of his motion picture script and other
related claims. The original complaint -- signed and filed by
Calloway's attorney, Ray L. LeFlore -- alleged that Calloway had
developed an idea for a motion picture and written a script, and
that respondents had begun to develop this work without his
permission. Respondents filed a motion to dismiss, pointing to a
series of documents annexed to the complaint that gave them the
right to develop the work commercially. The District Court
dismissed the complaint (with leave to refile), not on the ground
that the documents authorized the alleged infringement, but because
Calloway's complaint had failed to specify the registration number
of his copyright and the dates upon which the alleged acts of
infringement had occurred.
An amended complaint, again signed by LeFlore, was filed several
weeks later. In addition to remedying the defects that were the
basis of dismissal, it newly asserted that Calloway's signatures on
the documents purporting to grant an option had been forged by
respondents, and included that among the actions for which damages
were sought. Plaintiff relied on this forgery claim in opposing
respondents' motions to dismiss and motions for summary
judgment.
Page 493 U. S. 122
In October, 1984, LeFlore joined with Radovan Pavelic to form
the law partnership of Pavelic & LeFlore. Thereafter, all court
papers in the case were signed:
Pavelic & LeFlore
By /s/ Ray L. LeFlore
(A Member of the Firm)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Several of these papers, including interrogatory responses and a
proposed pretrial order, continued to rely upon the allegation of
forgery. At trial, the District Court found insufficient evidence
to support that contention, and directed a verdict in favor of
respondents on that issue. The jury returned a verdict against
plaintiff on all remaining claims.
Upon respondents' motion and after a hearing, the District Court
imposed a Rule 11 sanction in the amount of $100,000 against
Pavelic & LeFlore on the ground that the forgery claim had no
basis in fact and had not been investigated sufficiently by
counsel. Radovan Pavelic moved to relieve the firm of the sanction,
contending that (1) the firm did not exist during a major portion
of the litigation and therefore was not fully responsible for the
Rule 11 violations, and (2) Rule 11 empowers the court to impose a
sanction only upon the attorney who signed the paper, not upon that
attorney's law firm. The District Court accepted the first
contention, and therefore amended its order to shift half of the
sanction from the firm to LeFlore. It rejected the second
contention, however, concluding that Rule 11 sanctions may be,
imposed "on both the individual attorney and the law firm on whose
behalf he signed the papers."
Calloway v. Marvel Entertainment
Group, 650 F.
Supp. 684, 687 (SDNY 1986).
The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed, 854 F.2d
1452, 1479 (1988), thus placing itself in square disagreement with
an earlier holding of the Fifth Circuit that Rule 11 authorizes
sanctions against no attorney other than the individual lawyer or
lawyers who sign court papers,
see Robinson
Page 493 U. S. 123
v. National Cash Register Co., 808 F.2d 1119, 1128-1130
(1987). We granted certiorari, 489 U.S. 1009 (1989).
II
We give the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure their plain
meaning,
Walker v. Armco Steel Corp., 446 U.
S. 740, 750, n. 9 (1980), and generally with them, as
with a statute, "[w]hen we find the terms . . . unambiguous,
judicial inquiry is complete."
Rubin v. United States,
449 U. S. 424,
449 U. S. 430
(1981). The specific text of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11 at
issue here is the provision that requires a court, when a paper is
signed in violation of the Rule, to "impose upon the person who
signed it . . . an appropriate sanction." Thus viewed in isolation,
the phrase "person who signed" is ambiguous as to the point before
us today. That is not so, however, when it is read in the total
context of all the provisions of Rule 11 dealing with the signing
of filings. Those provisions (all of Rule 11 except two sentences)
are as follows:
"Every pleading, motion, and other paper of a party represented
by an attorney shall be signed by at least one attorney of record
in the attorney's individual name, whose address shall be stated. A
party who is not represented by an attorney shall sign the party's
pleading, motion, or other paper and state the party's address. . .
. The signature of an attorney or party constitutes a certificate
by the signer that the signer has read the pleading, motion, or
other paper; that to the best of the signer's knowledge,
information, and belief formed after reasonable inquiry it is well
grounded in fact and is warranted by existing law or a good faith
argument for the extension modification, or reversal of existing
law, and that it is not interposed for any improper purpose, such
as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in
the cost of litigation. If a pleading, motion, or other paper is
not signed, it shall be stricken unless it is signed promptly after
the omission is called to the attention
Page 493 U. S. 124
of the pleader or movant. If a pleading, motion, or other paper
is signed in violation of this rule, the court, upon motion or upon
its own initiative, shall impose upon the person who signed it, a
represented party, or both, an appropriate sanction, which may
include an order to pay to the other party or parties the amount of
the reasonable expenses incurred because of the filing of the
pleading, motion, or other paper, including a reasonable attorney's
fee."
In other contexts, the phrase "the person who signed it" might
bear the somewhat technical legal meaning of the natural or
juridical person in whose name or on whose behalf the paper was
signed; but in a paragraph beginning with a requirement of
individual signature, and then proceeding to discuss the import and
consequences of signature, we think references to the signer in the
later portions must reasonably be thought to connote the individual
signer mentioned at the outset. It is as strange to think that the
phrase "person who signed" in the last sentence refers to the
partnership represented by the signing attorney, as it would be to
think that the earlier phrase "the signer has read the pleading"
refers to a reading not necessarily by the individual signer but by
someone in the partnership; or that the earlier phrase "[i]f a
pleading . . . is not signed" refers not to an absence of
individual signature but to an absence of signature on behalf of
the partnership. Just as the requirement of signature is imposed
upon the individual, we think the recited import and consequences
of signature run
as to him.
Respondents' interpretation is particularly hard to square with
the text, since they do not assert that "the person who signed,"
and who "shall" be sanctioned under the Rule, is
only the
partnership (that would obviously be unacceptable), but rather is
either the partnership
or the individual
attorney,
or both, at the court's option. But leaving that
option unexpressed seems quite inconsistent with the extreme care
with which the Rule, in the very same sentence, makes clear
Page 493 U. S. 125
that the mandatory sanction must extend to "the person who
signed [the paper], a represented party, or both." It is surely
puzzling why the text would be so precise about that but leave to
speculation whether only the individual attorney or his firm or
both can be sanctioned. The puzzlement does not exist, of course,
if "the person who signed" means
only the individual
attorney.
Respondents appeal to "long and firmly established legal
principles of partnership and agency," Brief for Respondents Marvel
Entertainment Group
et al. 29, under which all the members
of a partnership are liable for the authorized acts of a partner or
employee,
see Restatement (Second) of Agency § 140 (1958).
We are not dealing here, however, with common law liability, but
with a Rule that strikingly departs from normal common law
assumptions such as that of delegability. The signing attorney
cannot leave it to some trusted subordinate, or to one of his
partners, to satisfy himself that the filed paper is factually and
legally responsible; by signing, he represents not merely the fact
that it is so, but also the fact that he personally has applied his
own judgment. Where the text establishes a duty that cannot be
delegated, one may reasonably expect it to authorize punishment
only of the party upon whom the duty is placed. We think that to be
the fair import of the language here.
Respondents also rely upon the fact that, after formation of the
partnership, LeFlore's signature was explicitly
on behalf
of the firm. The simple response is that signature on behalf
of the firm was not a signature that could comply with the first
sentence of the Rule, and not a signature to which the later
portions of the Rule attach consequences. Rule 11 says that papers
must be signed "by at least one attorney of record
in the
attorney's individual name." Even if LeFlore's signature in
the fashion indicated had the effect of making the firm and all its
partners (including himself) attorneys of record, it is only his
signature
in his individual name that satisfies the first
sentence of the Rule, and
Page 493 U. S. 126
it is that signature, in that individual capacity, to which the
later portions of the Rule refer. It has long been thought the
better practice for the attorney complying with Rule 11 not to sign
for his firm, but to sign in his individual name and on
his own behalf, with the name of his firm beneath.
See
Gavit, The New Federal Rules and State Procedure, 25 A.B.A.J. 367,
371 (1939) (Under Rule 11, "the practice for pleadings to be signed
in the name of a partnership" is "undesirable" and "improper").
Respondents, and the opinion of the Court of Appeals, rely
heavily upon the contention that the policies underlying Rule 11
will best be served by holding a law firm accountable for its
attorney's violation. In the Court of Appeals' words,
"[law firm] responsibility for Rule 11 sanctions will create
strong incentives for internal monitoring, and greater monitoring
will result in improved prefiling inquiries and fewer baseless
claims."
854 F.2d, at 1480. Even if it were entirely certain that
liability on the part of the firm would more effectively achieve
the purposes of the Rule, we would not feel free to pursue that
objective at the expense of a textual interpretation as unnatural
as we have described. Our task is to apply the text, not to improve
upon it.
But in any event it is not at all clear that respondents'
strained interpretation would better achieve the purposes of the
Rule. It would, to be sure, better guarantee reimbursement of the
innocent party for expenses caused by the Rule 11 violation, since
the partnership will normally have more funds than the individual
signing attorney. The purpose of the provision in question,
however, is not reimbursement but "sanction"; and the purpose of
Rule 11 as a whole is to bring home to the individual signer his
personal, nondelegable responsibility. It is at least arguable that
these purposes are better served by a provision which makes clear
that, just as the court expects the signer personally -- and not
some nameless person within his law firm -- to validate the truth
and legal reasonableness of the papers filed, so also it will
visit
Page 493 U. S. 127
upon him personally -- and not his law firm -- its retribution
for failing in that responsibility. The message thereby conveyed to
the attorney, that this is not a "team effort," but, in the last
analysis,
yours alone, is precisely the point of Rule 11.
Moreover, psychological effect aside, there will be greater
economic deterrence upon the signing attorney, who will know for
certain that the district court will impose its sanction entirely
upon him, and not divert part of it to a partnership of which he
may not (if he is only an associate) be a member, or which (if he
is a member) may not choose to seek recompense from him. To be
sure, the partnership's knowledge that it was subject to sanction
might induce it to increase "internal monitoring," but one can
reasonably believe that more will be achieved by directly
increasing the incentive for the individual signer to take care.
Such a belief is at least not so unthinkable as to compel the
conclusion that the Rule does not mean what it most naturally seems
to say.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Second Circuit is
reversed insofar as it allows Rule 11 sanctions to be imposed
against Pavelic & LeFlore. The case is remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Justice MARSHALL, dissenting.
We have consistently held that a trial judge bears the primary
responsibility for managing the cases before him. One of the
fundamental purposes of Rule 11 is to strengthen the hand of the
trial judge in his efforts to police abusive litigation practices
and to provide him sufficient flexibility to craft penalties
appropriate to each case. The Court's interpretation of Rule 11, in
contrast, is overly restrictive, as it reads into the Rule an
absolute immunity for law firms from any sanction for their
misconduct.
Although the Court recognizes that the relevant phrase in Rule
11 -- "the person who signed" the pleading, motion, or paper at
issue -- could mean a
juridical person on whose behalf
Page 493 U. S. 128
the document is signed,
ante at
493 U. S. 458,
it nonetheless finds that the phrase has a more limited meaning in
the context of the Rule as a whole. As I cannot acquiesce in such
an unnecessary erosion of the discretion of federal trial judges, I
dissent.
The Court's reading of the "plain meaning" of Rule 11, is based
entirely on the connection it perceives between the language at the
beginning of the Rule, which refers to an individual "signer," and
the crucial language in the last sentence, which allows a court to
impose sanctions on "the person who signed" a pleading or paper.
Ante at
493 U. S.
123-124. Although the text of the Rule does not
foreclose the reading the Court finds compelling, that
interpretation is by no means the only reasonable one -- and
certainly is not required by the "plain meaning." Significantly, in
three separate places the Rule identifies the person signing a
document as the "signer." Yet it uses an entirely different phrase,
"the person who signed" the pleading, in its listing of parties who
may be sanctioned for violations, thereby drawing an explicit
distinction between the two phrases. If the drafters had intended
to limit the entity that could be sanctioned under the Rule to the
individual signer, they easily could have repeated the word
"signer" a fourth time. The use of different phrases may reasonably
be viewed as an indication of two different meanings. In the case
of "signer," the drafters unambiguously sought to refer to the
individual who actually signed the document; in their subsequent
use of the phrase "the person who signed," the drafters may have
signaled their intent to allow a court to impose sanctions on any
juridical person, including the law firm of the individual signer.
In the context of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, drafted by
a committee familiar with traditional legal concepts, one can
reasonably assume that the word "person" indicates more than just
natural persons, encompassing partnerships and professional
corporations as well.
See, e.g., 5 U.S.C. § 551(2)
(Administrative Procedure Act defines
Page 493 U. S. 129
"person" as an "individual, partnership, corporation,
association, or public or private organization other than an
agency"); N.Y. Partnership Law § 2 (McKinney 1988) (defining
"person" to include "individuals, partnerships, corporations, and
other associations"). At the least, an interpretation of Rule 11
that gives "person" its legal meaning is no less plausible than the
majority's more restrictive reading of the Rule.
The purposes of the Rule support this construction of Rule 11.
All pleadings, motions and papers must be signed by an attorney in
his
individual name. This requirement serves in part the
administrative goal of identifying for the court one person who can
answer questions about the papers. Because Rule 11 proceedings
often occur at the end of litigation,
see Advisory
Committee's Notes on Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 11, 28 U.S.C.App., p. 129
(1982 ed., Supp. V), it will often be crucial that the relevant
documents, which may have been filed months or even years earlier,
identify a specific individual with knowledge of their contents. No
such administrative concerns suggest that the phrase "the person
who signed" the paper should be restricted to an individual.
Furthermore, as the majority emphasizes,
ante at
493 U. S. 460,
the requirement of an individual signer promotes a measure of
individual accountability by ensuring that someone takes direct
responsibility for each filing. Yet encouraging individual
accountability and firm accountability are not mutually exclusive
goals. Indeed, individual accountability may be heightened when an
attorney understands that his carelessness or maliciousness may
subject both himself and his firm to liability. The concern that a
person take direct responsibility for each paper is not disserved
by holding the law firm responsible in cases where the district
court determines that both are blameworthy. In short, it is not
internally inconsistent, nor does it inevitably lead to "puzzling"
results,
ante at
493 U. S. 459,
to allow a trial judge the discretion to impose sanctions on a law
firm, a juridical person, for which a signing attorney acts as
agent.
Page 493 U. S. 130
The policies underlying Rule 11 decisively indicate that
"person" should be interpreted broadly, so that a court can
effectively exercise discretion in formulating appropriate
sanctions. Although, as the majority infers from the Rule's text,
one purpose of Rule 11 may be "to bring home" to the individual
signer his personal responsibility for complying with its dictates,
ante at
493 U. S. 460,
the Rule is
explicitly designed to deter improper
pleadings, motions, and papers. Advisory Committee's Notes on Fed.
Rule Civ. Proc. 11, 28 U.S.C.App., p. 129 ("The word
sanctions'
in the caption . . . stresses a deterrent orientation in dealing
with improper pleadings"). Admittedly, in some cases, sanctions
imposed solely on the individual signer may halt abusive practices
most effectively. In other cases, however, deterrence might best be
served by imposing sanctions on the signer's law firm in an attempt
to encourage internal monitoring. The trial judge is in the best
position to assess the dynamics of each situation and to act
accordingly.
Recognizing the need to tailor the sanction to each particular
situation, the Advisory Committee emphasized in a related context
the need for "flexibility" in dealing with violations.
See
ibid. (discussing the effect of the words "shall impose" on
the trial court's discretion to impose sanctions). Flexibility is
no less important when a judge decides whether one, some, or all of
the many entities before him should be held responsible for
improper pleadings, motions, or papers. Where, as here, the Rule
itself does not demand rigidity, it is unwise for the Court to
constrict the options available to a trial judge faced with a
violation of Rule 11. The judge who observes improper behavior and
who is intimately familiar with the facts of a case should be
allowed to fashion the penalty that most effectively deters future
abuse. Today's decision unwisely ties the hands of trial judges who
must deal frequently and immediately with Rule 11 violations, and
ill serves the goal of administering that Rule justly and
efficiently.
See Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 1.
Page 493 U. S. 131
The District Court apportioned the sanction here between the
signing attorney and his law firm, based on its assessment of the
relative culpability of each.
650 F.
Supp. 684 (SDNY 1986). I firmly believe that this sort of
penalty is precisely what Rule 11 contemplates. I therefore cannot
join the Court's reading of the Rule which creates an immunity for
law firms from its coverage.